| Literature DB >> 35947439 |
Brian Chu1, Daniel M O'Connor2, Marilyn Wan1, Ian Barnett3, Haochang Shou3, Marc Judson4, Misha Rosenbach1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Large gaps exist in understanding the symptomatic and functional impact of sarcoidosis, a rare multisystem granulomatous disease affecting fewer than 200,000 individuals in the United States. Smartphones could be used for prospective research, especially for rare diseases where organizing large cohorts can be challenging, given their near ubiquitous ownership and ability to track objective and subjective data with increasingly sophisticated technology.Entities:
Keywords: development; digital health; enroll; exercise; fitness; mHealth; mobile app; mobile health; physical activity; quality of life; rare disease; recruit; sarcoidosis; smartphone; tracking
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35947439 PMCID: PMC9403819 DOI: 10.2196/38331
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ISSN: 2291-5222 Impact factor: 4.947
Figure 1Screenshots of new participant experience in the Sarcoidosis App (Android version).
Baseline characteristics of participants in the Sarcoidosis App study (N=629).
| Characteristic | Value | |
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| Female | 404 (64.2) |
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| Male | 199 (31.6) |
|
| Missing | 26 (4.1) |
| Mean age (years), mean (median; SD) | 51.0 (50; 10.95) | |
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| White | 513 (81.6) |
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| Black or African American | 86 (13.7) |
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| Other/Unknown | 27 (4.3) |
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| Missing | 3 (0.5) |
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| Hispanic/Latino | 32 (5.1) |
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| Non-Hispanic | 587 (93.3) |
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| Missing | 10 (1.6) |
| BMIa, mean (SD) | 32.12 (7.75) | |
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| <1 | 127 (20.2) |
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| 1-5 | 251 (39.9) |
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| 5-20 | 197 (31.3) |
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| >20 | 52 (8.3) |
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| Missing | 2 (0.3) |
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| High school | 8 (1.3) |
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| General Educational Development | 205 (32.6) |
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| College | 266 (42.3) |
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| Graduate | 150 (23.8) |
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| Student | 6 (1.0) |
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| Part-time | 44 (7.0) |
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| Full-time | 316 (50.2) |
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| Unemployed | 61 (9.7) |
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| Disabled | 114 (18.1) |
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| Retired | 82 (13.0) |
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| Missing | 6 (1.0) |
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| <15,000 | 49 (7.8) |
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| 15,000-30,000 | 58 (9.2) |
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| 30,000-60,000 | 139 (22.1) |
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| 60,000-100,000 | 166 (26.4) |
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| >100,000 | 194 (30.8) |
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| Missing | 23 (3.7) |
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| No financial impact | 124 (19.7) |
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| Slightly affected | 223 (35.5) |
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| Greatly affected | 178 (28.3) |
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| Severely affected | 101 (16.1) |
|
| Missing | 3 (0.5) |
aBMI was obtained from 605 participants.
Sarcoidosis Assessment Test (SAT) survey results at baseline. A score of 50 represents the mean score of the original calibration sample of the SAT.
| SAT module | Participants, n | Module score, mean (SD) |
| Activity [+]a | 552 | 39.90 (7.97) |
| Fatigue [–]b | 564 | 62.67 (9.32) |
| Lungs [–] | 572 | 45.87 (8.46) |
| Pain [–] | 544 | 60.48 (10.63) |
| Skin symptoms [–] | 208 | 57.80 (6.99) |
| Sleep [–] | 567 | 58.38 (9.51) |
| Stigma/embarrassment/skin impact [–] | 535 | 49.73 (8.65) |
aA higher score representing a higher quality of life.
bA higher score representing a lower quality of life.
Figure 2Correlation between Sarcoidosis Assessment Test surveys of physical activity, lung symptoms, and fatigue with device-reported physical activity data. [+] indicates that a higher score represents a higher quality of life. [-] indicates that a higher score represents a lower quality of life. P and ρ are the P value and Spearman correlation coefficient, respectively.
Figure 3Correlation between Sarcoidosis Assessment Test surveys of physical activity, lung symptoms, and fatigue with device-reported average daily distance traveled. [+] indicates that a higher score represents a higher quality of life. [-] indicates that a higher score represents a lower quality of life. P and ρ are the P value and Spearman correlation coefficient, respectively.
Initial response to survey of medical resource usage (N=517).
| Variables | Value, n (%) | |
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| None | 206 (39.8) |
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| 1 | 153 (29.6) |
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| More than 1 | 156 (30.1) |
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| None | 392 (75.8) |
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| 1 | 70 (13.5) |
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| More than 1 | 52 (10.1) |
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| None | 442 (85.5) |
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| 1 | 57 (11.0) |
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| More than 1 | 18 (3.5) |
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| None | 478 (94.5) |
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| 1 | 31 (6.0) |
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| More than 1 | 7 (1.4) |
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| None | 279 (54.0) |
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| 1 day | 45 (8.7) |
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| 2-6 days | 73 (14.1) |
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| 7-14 days | 22 (4.3) |
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| >Half month | 12 (2.3) |
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| Entire month | 64 (12.4) |
aER: emergency room.
Responses to survey of baseline medication usage (N=614).
| Variables | Participants, n/N (%) | |
| Are you currently being treated with medications for your sarcoidosis? (Yes) | 437/614 (71.2) | |
| Are you taking prednisone for sarcoidosis? | 257/437 (41.9) | |
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| 1-10 | 131/257 (50.9) |
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| 11-20 | 65/257 (25.3) |
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| 21-60 | 57/257 (22.2) |
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| >61 | 4/257 (1.6) |
| Are you taking any medications other than prednisone for sarcoidosis? | 354/437 (57.7) | |
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| Hydroxychloroquine | 71/354 (20.1) |
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| Methotrexate | 134/354 (37.9) |
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| Chloroquine | 4/354 (1.1) |
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| Azathioprine | 29/354 (8.2) |
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| Leflunomide | 6/354 (1.7) |
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| Mycophenolate mofetil | 33/354 (9.3) |
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| Infliximab | 51/354 (14.4) |
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| Adalimumab | 28/354 (7.9) |
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| Other medications | 182/354 (51.4) |
Medication adverse effects survey (N=526).
| Variables | Participants, n/N (%) | |
| Have you taken any medications for sarcoidosis in the past month? | 379/526 (72.1) | |
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| Yes, major side effects requiring change in medications | 104/379 (27.4) |
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| Yes, minor side effects | 140/379 (36.9) |
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| Possibly/unsure | 78/379 (20.6) |
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| No | 70/379 (18.5) |